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Nuclear Power Fission, Fusion and the Future

Explore the concepts of nuclear fission and fusion, their applications in power generation, and the future of nuclear energy. Learn about the safety measures, fuel sources, and advancements in reactor systems. Discover how nuclear power plays a crucial role in the energy mix.

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Nuclear Power Fission, Fusion and the Future

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  1. Nuclear PowerFission, Fusion and the Future Name Title Affiliation

  2. What is electricity? Mathematically = flow of charged particles Practically = flow of electrons (they move faster) Electrons flow through conductors

  3. Electricity • If you move a conductor through a magnetic field, electric current is produced. • If you move a magnetic field through a conductor, electric current is produced.

  4. Generator Magnet Simply a magnet surrounded by conductors

  5. Generator • You have to spin the generator. • For a power plant, generators are huge and heavy. • A lot of energy is needed to spin the generator. • You have to create rotational motion.

  6. Turbine • A turbine is a device that takes energy from a source and turns it into rotational motion, which turns the generator. Basically, it is a large, fancy fan.

  7. Steam turbine • Most power plants use steam to spin the turbine • The turbine gets its energy from both the flow motion of the steam and the energy released from cooling the steam. • Steam cycle advantages: • Well-understood technology • Water is relatively inexpensive and available • Burnable fuel is readily available

  8. Where does the steam come from? • Steam comes from boiling water • Just like a tea kettle • Boiling occurs in the boiler • Any heat source can be used • Coal, Oil, Natural Gas • Wood, Trash, Biomass • Nuclear Fission

  9. Nuclear Fission

  10. Steam Generator Steam produced Turbine Electricity A nuclear power plant uses fission to create heat. Heat

  11. Uranium atom Fission begins with neutrons Neutrons

  12. Fission releases energy in the form of heat Heat Neutrons

  13. The products of nuclear fission • Two lighter elements • 2-3 neutrons • Gammas • ≈200 MeV per fission

  14. The Chain Reaction

  15. Modeling fission

  16. Nuclear reactor • Essential components • Fissile Fuel (usually enriched uranium) Fissions upon absorption of thermal neutron to create heat • Moderator • To moderate, or slow, the speed of the fast neutrons • Made of a material that will scatter neutrons • H2O and graphite most common • Coolant Takes heat from reactor fuel core to make steam to make electricity • Control Typically composed of neutron absorbers e.g. boron and cadmium

  17. Boiling water reactor

  18. Pressurized water reactor

  19. Nuclear energy explained

  20. Controlling the chain reaction Fuel assembly Control rods Withdraw control rods, reaction increases Insert control rods, reaction decreases

  21. Name that energy

  22. Safety is engineered into reactor designs Containment vessel 1.5-inch thick steel Shield building wall 3 foot thick reinforced concrete Dry well wall 5 foot thick reinforced concrete Bio shield 4 foot thick leaded concrete with 1.5-inch thick steel lining inside and out Reactor vessel 4 to 8 inches thick steel Reactor fuel weir wall 1.5 foot thick concrete

  23. Nuclear Fusion

  24. Fusion • Opposite of fission • Combines light nuclei elements • Powers the sun and stars • Hard to achieve on Earth

  25. Basic fusion reaction

  26. Modeling fusion

  27. Neutron (n) 1.008665 u Deuterium (D) 2.014012 u Alpha (a) 4.002603 u Tritium (T) 3.016049 u 5.030061 u 5.011268 u

  28. Compared to other sources

  29. Creating fusion on Earth • Very high temperature (150,000,000°C) • High pressure • Plasma particle density • Confinement

  30. What is plasma? SOLID Ice Cold LIQUID Water Warm GAS Steam Hot PLASMA Hotter • Electrons separate from nucleus • 4th state of matter

  31. Characteristics of a plasma • Most atoms are ionized • Whole plasma is still neutral • Can exist at any temperature and density

  32. Familiar plasmas

  33. What’s confinement? • Plasma likes to expand. • Confinement keeps the plasma stable so fusion can occur.

  34. Confinement concepts Inertial Gravitational Magnetic

  35. Overcoming Coulomb repulsion • Nuclei have positive charge & like charges repel • Accelerate atoms to high energy: 30-1000 keV • accelerator • used to produce neutrons and isotopes • heat • make atoms hot enough that their average random motion is at very high energy • 1 eV 11000 K

  36. ITER tokamak reactor • Project launched 1985 • Members • China, the European Union, • India, Japan, Korea, Russia, • United States • Located in France • First plasma 2025 • Deuterium-Tritium 2035 • www.iter.org

  37. The promise of fusion energy • Plasma cools in seconds • No risk of chain reaction • No fissile materials • Fuel from seawater • No long-lived radioactive waste

  38. Fission vs Fusion

  39. Future • advanced fuels • reactor systems • space power systems • safety & risk assessment U.S. national laboratories are exploring:

  40. Advanced fuels TRISO fuel particle

  41. Reactor systems • Extend the life of existing reactors • Advanced Reactor Technologies (ART) • Small modular reactors

  42. Reactors of the (near) future Photo: NuScale Power Photo: GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy

  43. Nuclear in the energy mix • Benefits • Clean air • Nearly 60% of US carbon-free energy • Excellent overall safety record • Reliable baseload 24/7 • Challenges • Low cost of fracked natural gas • Halt in locating permanent storage • Public perception regarding safety

  44. Resources ANS Center for Nuclear Science and Technology Information nuclearconnect.org Navigating Nuclear: Energizing Our World™ navigatingnuclear.com ANS Operations and Power Division http://opd.ans.org/ ANS Fusion Energy Division http://fed.ans.org/ Idaho National Laboratory www.inl.gov U.S. Department of Energy’s Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory www.pppl.gov Department of Energy https://www.energy.gov/science-innovation/energy-sources/nuclear

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